139 research outputs found
Hydrodynamic model for expansion and collisional relaxation of x-ray laser-excited multi-component nanoplasma
The irradiation of an atomic cluster with a femtosecond x-ray free-electron
laser pulse results in a nanoplasma formation. This typically occurs within a
few hundreds femtoseconds. By this time the x-ray pulse is over, and the direct
photoinduced processes no longer contributing. All created electrons within the
nanoplasma are thermalized. The nanoplasma thus formed is a mixture of atoms,
electrons and ions of various charges. While expanding, it is undergoing
electron impact ionization and three-body recombination. Below we present a
hydrodynamic model to describe the dynamics of such multi-component nanoplasma.
The model equations are derived by taking the moments of the corresponding
Boltzmann kinetic equations. We include the equations obtained, together with
the source terms due to electron impact ionization and three-body
recombination, in our hydrodynamic solver. Model predictions for a test case:
expanding spherical Ar nanoplasma are obtained. With this model we complete the
two-step approach to simulate x-ray created nanoplasmas, enabling
computationally efficient simulations of their picosecond dynamics. Moreover,
the hydrodynamic framework including collisional processes can be easily
extended for other source terms and then applied to follow relaxation of any
finite non-isothermal multi-component nanoplasma with its components relaxed
into local thermodynamic equilibrium.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. This article has been accepted by Physics of
Plasmas. After it is published, it will be found at
http://scitation.aip.org/content/aip/journal/po
Thermally stimulated currents of Zn-Bi-O thin film arresters
Ceramic varistors based on zinc oxide have excellent properties as protection devices used in power industry. However, their breakdown voltage, dependent on number of grain boundaries, is too high for use in electronic applications. In this work, performance of micro-devices having varistor-type current-voltage characteristics with low breakdown voltage is reported. The thermally stimulated depolarisation current (TSDC) technique was used to study the dielectric relaxation of the Zn-Bi-0 thin-film arresters. The surface varistor layers were prepared by r.f. magnetron sputtering on nickel support. The TSDC measuring system and cryostat apparatus used in experiment have been described
Application of Silicon Carbide Chills in Controlling the Solidification Process of Casts Made of IN-713C Nickel Superalloy
The paper presents the method of manufacturing casts made of the IN-713C nickel superalloy using the wax lost investment castingprocess and silicon carbide chills. The authors designed experimental casts, the gating system and selected the chills material. Wax pattern,ceramic shell mould and experimental casts were prepared for the purposes of research. On the basis of the temperature distributionmeasurements, the kinetics of the solidification process was determined in the thickened part of the plate cast. This allowed to establish thequantity of phase transitions which occurred during cast cooling process and the approximate values of liquidus, eutectic, solidus andsolvus temperatures as well as the solidification time and the average value of cast cooling rate. Non-destructive testing and macroscopicanalysis were applied to determine the location and size of shrinkage defects. The authors present the mechanism of solidification andformation of shrinkage defects in casts with and without chills. It was found that the applied chills influence significantly the hot spots andthe remaining part of the cast. Their presence allows to create conditions for solidification of IN-713C nickel superalloy cast withoutshrinkage defects
Modification of the Cu-ETP copper surface layer with chromium by physical vapor deposition (PvD) and diffusion annealing
In the study, an attempt was made to increase durability of copper by creating a surface layer saturated or supersaturated with chromium only in the area of the highest thermo-mechanical loads during the welding process. There was developed a two-stage technological process, consisting of: application of chrome coating of the thickness approx. 1 µm on the Cu-ETP copper surface using the PVD method, and then performing the process of its diffusion by annealing at a temperature of 950°C in the vacuum. As a result, a diffusion CuCr layer with a thickness of approx. 20 µm was obtained, with hardness of approx. 120 HV0,01
Modification of the Cu-ETP copper surface layer with chromium by physical vapor deposition (PvD) and diffusion annealing
In the study, an attempt was made to increase durability of copper by creating a surface layer saturated or supersaturated with chromium only in the area of the highest thermo-mechanical loads during the welding process. There was developed a two-stage technological process, consisting of: application of chrome coating of the thickness approx. 1 µm on the Cu-ETP copper surface using the PVD method, and then performing the process of its diffusion by annealing at a temperature of 950°C in the vacuum. As a result, a diffusion CuCr layer with a thickness of approx. 20 µm was obtained, with hardness of approx. 120 HV0,01
Double logarithms, , and the NLO DGLAP evolution for the non-singlet component of the nucleon spin structure function,
Theoretical predictions show that at low values of Bjorken the spin
structure function, is influenced by large logarithmic corrections,
, which may be predominant in this region. These corrections are
also partially contained in the NLO part of the standard DGLAP evolution. Here
we calculate the non-singlet component of the nucleon structure function,
, and its first moment, using a unified evolution
equation. This equation incorporates the terms describing the NLO DGLAP
evolution and the terms contributing to the resummation. In order
to avoid double counting in the overlapping regions of the phase-space, a
unique way of including the NLO terms into the unified evolution equation is
proposed. The scheme-independent results obtained from this unified evolution
are compared to the NLO fit to experimental data, GRSV'2000. Analysis of the
first moments of shows that the unified evolution including the
resummation goes beyond the NLO DGLAP analysis. Corrections
generated by double logarithms at low influence the -dependence of the
first moments strongly.Comment: 13 pages, latex, 2 figures; Appendix adde
Augmented collisional ionization via excited states in XUV cluster interactions
The impact of atomic excited states is investigated via a detailed model of
laser-cluster interactions, which is applied to rare gas clusters in intense
femtosecond pulses in the extreme ultraviolet (XUV). This demonstrates the
potential for a two-step ionization process in laser-cluster interactions, with
the resulting intermediate excited states allowing for the creation of high
charge states and the rapid dissemination of laser pulse energy. The
consequences of this excitation mechanism are demonstrated through simulations
of recent experiments in argon clusters interacting with XUV radiation, in
which this two-step process is shown to play a primary role; this is consistent
with our hypothesis that XUV-cluster interactions provide a unique window into
the role of excited atomic states due to the relative lack of photoionization
and laser field-driven phenomena. Our analysis suggests that atomic excited
states may play an important role in interactions of intense radiation with
materials in a variety of wavelength regimes, including potential implications
for proposed studies of single molecule imaging with intense X-rays.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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